
Anything goes.... In the name of National Security Story of Soni Sori A Joint report by: Saheli, Peoples Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL), Peoples Union for Democratic Righs (PUDR) and Women Against Sexual Vio- lence and State Repression (WSS) March 2012 In a society largely patriarchal, lives and dignity of women are always under constant threat and danger of being compromised. However, this takes on a more serious character, when State functionaries themselves violate the constitutional guarantees provided to women by law. Such crimes include cases of molestation, torture, rape and killings of women, ‘in custody’ of the state by state functionaries. As per the Government’s own estimates (National Crime Records Bureau) crimes against women have recorded a significant increase over the period 2006-2010. In comparison to 1,64,765 cases in 2006, in 2010, a total of 2,13,585 incidents were reported throughout the country. These figures largely relate to reported cases of dowry, rape, molestation, trafficking etc., by private individuals and are best a conservative estimate of trends, largely representing one aspect of the entire story. Crucially, these figures do not cover incidents of violence against women committed by state functionaries in custody, which usually go unreported. Through this small report, where we cover in detail the story of violence perpetrated against a 35 year old tribal woman, Soni Sori, by the Chhattisgarh police and the prison authorities of the jail where she is imprisoned, we intend to highlight this relatively pervasive aspect of violence against women in the custody of the state, by state functionaries. Constitutionally mandated to safeguard the lives of citizens, state functionaries such as the police, paramilitary, army and other security personnel, enjoy overwhelming authority over persons under their custody. In the context of ‘disturbed areas’, this necessarily translates into unquestioned powers to authorities to detain, interrogate and arrest suspicious persons in the name of protecting national security. Military offensives such as, Operation Green Hunt against Maoists in Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Jharkhand and West Bengal, counter-terrorism strategies in Kashmir or the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act in the North east, have strengthened the hands of the security establishment vis-a-vis the people. In taking up the case of Soni Sori, we would like to remind ourselves of some of the other important cases of violence against women perpetrated by State functionaries in the past. Like Mathura, the 16-year-old tribal girl who was raped by two policemen in the Desai Ganj police station in Maharashtra’s Chandrapur district in 1974, even as her relatives waited outside for her - only to have the Supreme Court let off the guilty on the grounds that there were no injuries to ‘establish’ that Mathura had ‘resisted’ the assault, and that ‘she seemed habituated to sex’. Like Thangjam Manorama alias Henthoi, the 32 year old woman from Imphal who was brutally tortured, raped and killed by personnel of the 17 Assam Rifles on 11 July 2004 after she was picked up ‘for questioning’, triggering the iconic naked protest by a dozen Manipuri women in Imphal, who stood before the headquarters of the Assam Rifles on July 15, 2004, screaming “Indian Army Rape Us”. Like Neelofar and Aasiya of Shopian who were abducted, gang raped and murdered in Kashmir in 2009 near a police camp, only to have the State and paramilitary machinery work to obfuscate the facts, protect the guilty and victimise the affected family and witnesses. If Mathura’s case galvanised the women’s movement, a coming together of women, from all over the country to campaign for change in the laws related to rape, Manorama’s death created national awareness of the crimes committed by the paramilitary forces under the protection of Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act. But like the campaign for justice in Manorama’s case, the Shopian case too found itself pitched against the greater narrative of national security and interest. After all how can the suffering of a few women be reason enough to pause for a moment to reflect upon what is being done in the name of protecting the country and its borders? And so it is in the case of Soni Sori, a 35 year old adivasi school teacher and the warden of a government-run school for tribal children in Jabeli, Dantewada, who was arrested and tortured in police custody in October 2011, but continues to her fight against injustice from her prison cell in Dantewada jail. In early October 2011, the 35 year old tribal woman, Soni Sori fled from her village Jabeli, in Dantewada Chhattisgarh, travelled all the way to Delhi. She took refuge in this absolutely alien and hostile city, leaving behind her three little children, only to save her life and to narrate the horrific tale of her harassment and that of her family by the Chhattisgarh police. She had hoped that she would be saved if her story became public. She had hoped that she could save herself from being falsely implicated if she appealed to the judiciary in the capital of this biggest democratic republic. Soni Sori managed to recount her experiences of continuous persecution to a weekly magazine Tehelka that made it public through a video graphic release. However before she could initiate any legal action she was arrested on 4 October, 2011. She was taken back to Chhattisgarh and was subjected to brutal mental and physical torture. She was verbally abused, given electrical shocks, stripped, beaten and sexually assaulted.. A medical examination conducted by NRS Medical College Hospital in Kolkata, following an order from the SC, confirmed the brutal torture. Who is Soni Sori and why is she being hounded? Soni Sori is among the few tribal women from Dantewada to be educated. And to become a school teacher and the warden of a government-run school for tribal children in Jabeli, Dantewada. In the war-torn district of Chhattisgarh, this was one of the few schools still operational in the countryside, till the Chhattisgarh police forced her to flee from Dantewada in early September 2011. She was born is a well to do and politically active family. Her father has been a sarpanch for the last 15 years, her uncle has been an MLA from the Communist party of India and her elder brother has been active with the Congress party. Her upbringing included exposure to Gandhian philosophy through her association with Himanshu Kumar of Vanvasi Chetna Ashram, both as her teacher and mentor. Politically aware, vocal and assertive, and conscious of being a tribal, Soni Sori believes in using her education to fight for the rights for fellow tribals. This has led her into confrontations with the contractors, politicians, police and even the Maoists. In struggles to raise minimum wages for the tribals in bidi leaf collection, for the rights of the mine workers, or against the illegal teak trade conducted by government officials, she was joined by her nephew Lingaram Kodopi, younger by a decade. These activities brought both of them into prominence. Lingaram was invited by the Maoists to join their ranks, which he declined. The police too tried to induct him as a Special Police Officer (SPO). The hounding of Soni and her nephew started with Lingaram’s refusal to be part of the SPOs or the Salwa Judum. On 30th August 2009, Lingaram was abducted by the Chhattisgarh police from his village Sameli, held in a toilet in a police station and tortured repeatedly for 40 days to force him to become a SPO. Soni Sori was instrumental in the filing of a habeas corpus petition in the High Court, which led to his release. This brave act was viewed by the police and security forces as a provocative attempt to question thier authority. Masaram Kodopi, his elder brother was the formal petitioner in Lingaram’s habeas corpus. He was arrested the very next day and accused of securing the release of a naxalite. Given this situation Lingaram was advised to leave Chhattisgarh to prevent his re-arrest under some trumped up charges. Travelling with the survivors of the police attack on Gompad and Gachchanpalli villages of Dantewada, Lingaram arrived in Delhi and recounted his harrowing experiences at the first meeting of the Citizens Initiative for Peace. He assisted the survivors in filing their petition with the Supreme Court. The fate of that petition and of the petitioner is another tale of administrative vengeance and judicial apathy as traumatic the present one. (see Box: Sodi Shambo) In Delhi, Lingaram enrolled himself in a journalism course at the International Media Institute of India at Noida and was vocal on news channels and other platforms on issues of tribals in Bastar. In April 2010 he also deposed before the Indian Peoples Tribunal at Delhi on the atrocities committed by Salwa Judum and the security forces as part of the Operation Green Hunt. Soni Sori felt the heat of Lingaram’s actions through regular harassments and threats by the Dantewada police to persuade her nephew to return. Demands were also made on her to become a police informer. Her refusal led to her name being dragged into every incident of Maoist violence in the vicinity. Shambo: Tale of a Survivor and Witness Shambo is 30 years old, or 35, she doesn’t know. She has four children. She lived in village Gompad in Dantewada district of Chhattisgarh, which is unconnected by road. The region where her village is situated has seen the presence of the Marxist- Leninist (now called Maoist) movement for the last two decades. Since 2005, the state government and the central government initiated and encouraged a group called the Salwa Judum to fight the Maoists.
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